The European Union (EU) is working on revising its climate, energy and transport-related legislation to align the current laws with its EU Green Deal objectives of reducing emissions by at least 55%, when compared with 1990 levels, by 2030 and achieving climate neutrality 2050. All EU policies must contribute to achieving the EU Green Deal objective in terms of the European Climate Law. The European Commission (the Commission) reviews every EU law to ensure its alignment with the EU emission reduction targets. This review is intended to be completed and effective by the time EU Member States update their national energy and climate plans in 2023 so that the new EU climate ambition is reflected within these plans. As part of this review, the Commission has proposed 13 broad legislative changes (dubbed the "Fit for 55" package) and presented these to the European Council in July 2021.
A lengthy process
Before most EU legislation can be passed that is binding on the Member States, approval by all Member States and the European Parliament is required (note there are exceptions, especially as regards tax legislation, which requires a unanimous agreement of the Council and the Parliament only has a consultative role, but environmental legislation is under the ordinary procedure). Essentially, the process involves three main parties:
- The Commission, which proposes laws, makes sure EU laws are appropriately applied, and manages EU spending programs;
- The European Parliament is made up of directly elected members from each EU country who debate and amend laws; and
- The Council of the European Union (the Council) is made up of government ministers from each EU country according to the policy area to be discussed (and who have the authority to commit their governments to the actions agreed on in the meetings) who have who meet to discuss, amend and adopt EU laws.
In a nutshell, the Council, together with the European Parliament, negotiates and adopts EU laws based on proposals from the European Commission. Various stages of discussion, voting, amending texts, re-voting, etc., occur within this process, so while it seems relatively straightforward, it is a rather long and complicated one.
Three parties, one common ground
The table below sets out the positions that have been taken by each of the three parties on different elements of the legislative proposals, which will be taken into the final negotiation stage ("trialogue"), where the final text is to be agreed upon (and become binding EU legislation).
Fit for 55 Package Proposal |
Topic |
Commission proposal (original, before amendments) |
EU Parliamentary position |
Council position |
EU Emissions Trading System (ETS) |
Overall emissions reduction ambition in the sector covered by the EU ETS |
61% emissions reduction by 2030, compared with 2005 |
63% emissions reduction by 2030 |
61% emissions reduction by 2030 |
Reduction of overall emissions ceiling (“re-basing”). |
One-off reduction in EU-wide quantity of allowances in circulation (number of allowances was not provided) |
Reduction in EU-wide quantity of allowances in circulation (120 million allowances over two years) |
One-off reduction in EU-wide quantity of allowances of 117 million allowances |
|
Increase in annual reduction rate of the cap per year (“linear reduction factor”) |
4,2% per year |
4.4% until the end of 2025, 4.5% from 2026 and 4.6% from 2029 |
4,2% per year |
|
Strengthening market stability reserve (MSR) |
Increased annual intake rate of allowances (24%) prolonged beyond 2023; threshold of 400 million allowances above which those placed in the reserve are no longer valid. |
Agree with the Commission proposal |
Agree with the Commission proposal |
|
Inclusion of maritime shipping emissions in EU ETS |
Extend the current EU ETS to the maritime sector from 2023 to 2025; 100% of verified emissions will be surrendered as of 2027. |
|
Accepted Commission proposal for the gradual introduction of obligations for shipping companies to surrender allowances
|
|
Aviation sector |
|
|
Agree with the Commission proposal |
|
New EU Emissions Trading System (ETS2) for buildings and road transport sectors |
Commencement date |
|
|
|
Emissions reduction trajectory and linear reduction factor |
5.15 from 2024 and 5.43 from 2028 |
Agree with the Commission proposal |
Agree with the Commission proposal |
|
Additions not covered in original proposal |
N/A |
N/A |
|
|
Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) |
Ending fee allowances for sectors covered by CBAM |
Gradually phase out free over ten years (10 percentage points every year from 2026 to 2035) |
Free allowances are to be phased out from 2027 and disappear by 2032. |
Slower reduction at the beginning of a ten-year period (2026 – 2035); accelerated rate of reduction at the end. |
Covered products |
Cement, iron and steel, aluminum, fertilizer, electricity (organic materials specifically excluded) |
Include polymers (the entire Chapter 39), organic chemicals (Chapter 29), hydrogen, ammonia |
Agree with the Commission proposal |
|
Covered emissions |
Direct emissions only (European Commission to evaluate, at the end of the transition period, whether the CBAM scope should be extended to include indirect emissions) |
Include indirect emissions (i.e., emissions arising from electricity used by manufacturers) |
At the end of the transitional phase, indirect emissions could be included (note: not will be included) |
|
Additions not covered in the original proposal |
|
|
Requested the monitoring of the impact of CBAM, including carbon leakage at borders |
|
Modernisation Fund |
|
Agreed with the Commission proposal, plus: Support from the Modernisation Fund should only be granted to the Member States that have adopted legally binding targets for achieving climate neutrality by 2050 at the latest, as well as measures for the phasing out of all fossil fuels in a timeframe consistent with set targets. |
Agreed with the Commission proposal, plus:
|
|
Effort Sharing Regulation (ESR) |
EU-wide greenhouse gas emissions reduction target |
|
Agree with the Commission proposal |
Agree with the Commission proposal |
Member state linear emissions trajectories |
Adjusted in 2025 only in the event that this leads to higher annual limits for the Member State concerned |
Annual emissions allowances are set for the whole period 2023 - 2030 |
Agree with the Commission proposal |
|
Social Climate Fund (SCF) |
Fund to support vulnerable households, micro-enterprises and transport users to support the creation of an emissions trading system for the buildings and road transport sectors |
Allocate a total of €72.2 billion over the 2025-2032 period through an allocation methodology. |
Allocate up to €72 billion until 2032 through an allocation methodology. |
Fund to be part of the EU budget, fed by external assigned revenues up to a maximum amount of €59 billion. Established over the period 2027-2032, to coincide with the entry into force of the ETS for the buildings and road transport sectors; retroactive eligibility of expenditure from 1 January 2026 |
Land Use, Land Use Change and Forestry (LULUCF) |
Overall net removal objective in the LULUCF sector at EU level |
At least 310 million tonnes of CO2 equivalent net removal by 2030, distributed among the member states as binding targets. |
At least 310 million tonnes of CO2 equivalent net removal and at least 50 Mt removal target from carbon farming by 2030 |
Agree with the Commission proposal |
Additions not covered in the original proposal |
|
The expanded scope that covers the entire land sector from 2031, with an EU target of achieving climate-neutrality in the land sector by 2035 |
Each member state to commit to achieving a sum of net GHG emissions and removals for the whole period from 2026 to 2030 |
|
CO2 emission performance standards for cars and vans |
CO2 emission reduction targets |
|
Zero-emission road mobility by 2035 |
Agree with the Commission proposal |
Additions not covered in the original proposal |
|
|
End the regulatory incentive mechanism for zero- and low-emission vehicles by 2030 |
|
Energy Efficiency Directive |
Revision of current EU-level target |
An increase from 32.5% to 36% for final energy consumption, and 39% for primary energy consumption |
Parliamentary sitting date planned for September 2022 |
Agree with the Commission proposal |
ReFuelEU Aviation |
Minimum share of a sustainable aviation fuel that should be made available at EU airports |
|
|
Agree with the Commission proposal |
Definition of sustainable fuels |
Liquid, drop-in aviation fuels (synthetic aviation fuels and biofuels produced from agricultural or forestry residues, algae, bio-waste or used cooking oil), that are fully fungible with conventional aviation fuel and compatible with existing aircraft engines
Exclusions:
|
Agree with the proposal, with the following amendments: Include:
Exclude:
|
Agree with the Commission proposal |
|
Additions not covered in original proposal |
- |
Create a Sustainable Aviation Fund (2023 - 2050) to accelerate the decarbonization of the aviation sector and support investment in sustainable aviation fuels, innovative aircraft propulsion technologies, and research for new engines. |
- |
A glimpse into the future
While there is still uncertainty regarding what form the final legislation will take and when it will come into effect, the above provides businesses who want to start preparing for the upcoming changes now (or just want to know what they could expect) some clarity as to what can be expected.
To future-proof operations, businesses should already put clear and implementable transition strategies in place to adapt to the upcoming changes and achieve the long-term goal of net zero emissions.
For more information about the impact of the Fit for 55 package on your company, please contact one of our experts.